Wilczynski Nancy L, Haynes R Brian, Lavis John N, Ramkissoonsingh Ravi, Arnold-Oatley Alexandra E
Health Information Research Unit, McMaster University Health Sciences Centre, Hamilton, Ont.
CMAJ. 2004 Nov 9;171(10):1179-85. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.1040512.
Evidence from health services research (HSR) is currently thinly spread through many journals, making it difficult for health services researchers, managers and policy-makers to find research on clinical practice guidelines and the appropriateness, process, outcomes, cost and economics of health care services. We undertook to develop and test search terms to retrieve from the MEDLINE database HSR articles meeting minimum quality standards.
The retrieval performance of 7445 methodologic search terms and phrases in MEDLINE (the test) were compared with a hand search of the literature (the gold standard) for each issue of 68 journal titles for the year 2000 (a total of 25,936 articles). We determined sensitivity, specificity and precision (the positive predictive value) of the MEDLINE search strategies.
A majority of the articles that were classified as outcome assessment, but fewer than half of those in the other categories, were considered methodologically acceptable (no methodologic criteria were applied for cost studies). Combining individual search terms to maximize sensitivity, while keeping specificity at 50% or more, led to sensitivities in the range of 88.1% to 100% for several categories (specificities ranged from 52.9% to 97.4%). When terms were combined to maximize specificity while keeping sensitivity at 50% or more, specificities of 88.8% to 99.8% were achieved. When terms were combined to maximize sensitivity and specificity while minimizing the differences between the 2 measurements, most strategies for HSR categories achieved sensitivity and specificity of at least 80%.
Sensitive and specific search strategies were validated for retrieval of HSR literature from MEDLINE. These strategies have been made available for public use by the US National Library of Medicine at www.nlm.nih.gov/nichsr/hedges/search.html.
卫生服务研究(HSR)的证据目前分散在众多期刊中,这使得卫生服务研究人员、管理人员和政策制定者难以找到关于临床实践指南以及卫生保健服务的适宜性、过程、结果、成本和经济学方面的研究。我们致力于开发并测试检索词,以便从MEDLINE数据库中检索出符合最低质量标准的HSR文章。
将MEDLINE中7445个方法学检索词和短语的检索性能(测试)与对2000年68种期刊每期文献的手工检索(金标准)进行比较(共25936篇文章)。我们确定了MEDLINE检索策略的敏感性、特异性和精确性(阳性预测值)。
大多数被归类为结果评估的文章被认为在方法学上是可接受的,但其他类别的文章中只有不到一半被认为如此(成本研究未应用方法学标准)。组合单个检索词以最大化敏感性,同时保持特异性在50%或更高,导致几个类别的敏感性在88.1%至100%之间(特异性在52.9%至97.4%之间)。当组合检索词以最大化特异性,同时保持敏感性在50%或更高时,特异性达到88.8%至99.8%。当组合检索词以最大化敏感性和特异性,同时最小化这两个测量值之间的差异时,大多数HSR类别的策略实现了至少80%的敏感性和特异性。
从MEDLINE中检索HSR文献的敏感且特异的检索策略得到了验证。美国国立医学图书馆已将这些策略发布在www.nlm.nih.gov/nichsr/hedges/search.html上供公众使用。